The health of the 2nd tier comps. ie WAFL, SANFL, & TSL is CRUCIAL to maintaining a thriving & growing AF culture in each heartland state. AF culture is not simply confined to the AFL comp. We need the 100 + year old State League 2nd tier clubs to attract maximum publicity, crowd, sponsor, & media support. They are often tribal, proudly suburban, often working class, with proud & impressive histories.
The VFL/AFL destroyed the VFA when it lost its Sunday game monopoly (The Cain govt. had previously banned the VFL from playing on Sundays, to safeguard the vitality of suburban, tribal VFA football). Some VFA clubs also contributed to their demise, by overspending on players, causing significant financial problems.
In Melb., AF culture & popularity has been diluted with the loss of the once very popular VFA. On a per capita basis, Melb. AFL crowds are now significantly lower than they were in the 70's -but on raw nos., still very high. There are probably now similar nos. of regd. soccer players in Melb. as there are AF regd. nos. (Soccer has huge female nos., particularly in schools; & soccer is easily superior in its regd. nos. in the western suburbs, a very large immigrant community).
The extremely highly paid AFL executives are supposed to be "the keepers of the code" -in the heartland states, IMO they have been failing for a long time, on community participation metrics; & on the hideous, congested, ugly aesthetic AFL game style since c. 2003
Do you believe that AF culture is stronger NOW in Perth -or when the WAFL was extremely strong , prior to the 1987 introduction of WCE?
WAFL GF's had record crowds up to 52,000 c. 1980 -what was Perth's population then?
Per capita, I assume GR regd. AF nos. are lower now cf 1980 (with the rise of regd. soccer & RU nos., big British, NZ, & Sth African communities in Perth)?
I really wouldn't know to be honest. I think what happened was that the majority of WA footy fans hopped onto the Eagles when they came along, and some ditched the Eagles for Freo when they happened and a lot of Freo people who were never that comfy with the Eagles backed Freo as well.
Whatever was left over, kept attending/supporting, holding ties to the WAFL.
The population has grown in WA, so in terms of numbers the Footy culture is probably as strong as it's ever been and possibly stronger.
It's a big question and I'm not sure how to answer it.
One thing I think has happened is that the majority of current fans in WA (AFL) are fairweather fans. I think there was a disconnect when the Eagles came along and the tribalism/loyalty that usually inhabits footy fans isn't as strong as it is in more traditional clubs. There are some very rusted on fans of both clubs now and I think it is slowly changing, or hope it is.
The culture among WAFL fans is still strong, but it is a dying thing unfortunately, fewer and fewer give a damn about it. Only old guys like me really care.



